Salmon rods and reels
Submitted by br3nno on Sun, 2019-04-07 21:14
Hi all,
Im sure this question has been butchered :/
But I am looking for rods in the 8-10ft range to cast lures for salmon, plugs, poppers and 20-30g twisties. Most likely off the rocks or small surf beach.
I imagine 20lb braid and 30lb leader. Budget is around $80-130 (rod/reel ea), could go less.
Any specific suggestions? Also fibre glass or graphite?
Thanks friends.
____________________________________________________________________________
BC
baconi22
Posts: 46
Date Joined: 05/12/18
shimano raider rodshimano
shimano raider rod
shimano nasci or shimano sedona 4000
nebbian1
Posts: 166
Date Joined: 31/08/17
I was in the same situation,
I was in the same situation, bought a Daiwa Arid X (9 foot, 14-45 grams casting weight) for around $90 and am very happy with it. Casts a twisty an absolute mile.
Paired it with a Nasci 4000 running 20 lb braid.
Uluabuster
Posts: 725
Date Joined: 12/12/10
Stay clear of fibre glass if
Stay clear of fibre glass if you are into luring.
First it takes away the sensitivity, so you can't feel much happening at the other end.
2ndly, they weigh a tonne. You will be casting probably 300-500 a sesh, so something that seems ok for bait soaking will feel like lead after your 20th cast.
Try to look for K guide rods, not sure if they are available at that price point. Reason being you don't want wind knots given it is windy at beaches / rocks and a windknot may result in your 40g metal slice with trebles flyig back towards your face... K guide doesn't eliminate wind knots, but reduce it considerably.
br3nno
Posts: 353
Date Joined: 25/12/12
Thanks mate. I see ratings
Thanks mate.
I see ratings for lure/cast weights, and one rod had 15-30 grams, 8-17lb rated. Is this just ideal?
https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Okuma-Competition-2-Piece-Graphite-Spin-Rod-with-Split-Grip-Butt/362433424658?ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AIT&var=631614669141&_trksid=p2057872.m2749.l2649
Will it be able to cast a 2 oz (60gram) lure without the tip snapping
BC
hairyhaggis
Posts: 36
Date Joined: 06/04/18
No
Nah, you wont be able to cast 2oz on a rod rated 15-30g. It will overload the rod and snap it. Anything really outside the stated cast weight wont allow the rod to perform as intended. You can get away with a few grams here and there, but more than double? You'll be running a greater risk for snapping the rod. Even if it didn't snap, you would still get better casting distance with the lower weight as the rod will bend and load up properly, allowing it to fling the lure further out.
I have a Daiwa Seajigger SJ 325M 10'6" for my lure throwing rod from the beach. It is rated 30g - 100g lure cast weight, but have found that 40-70g is the best weights for that rod to cast. Mot of my lures for the beach are no based around this value. I use 20lb line for it, as the rod is rated 6-9kg line.
Fishn n Ridin
Posts: 53
Date Joined: 21/09/17
Shimano Cranx 9ft is my
Shimano Cranx 9ft is my preferred for casting for salmon. Use 15lb braid and usually 40g metal slices. You will send lures halfway to Rottnest
br3nno
Posts: 353
Date Joined: 25/12/12
Cheers, do you know what
Cheers, do you know what vast weight the rod is rated for?
BC
Fishn n Ridin
Posts: 53
Date Joined: 21/09/17
It doesn't say on the rod but
It doesn't say on the rod but I've used it to cast 25g slices up to big triangle sinkers with half a herring fillet.
timboon
Posts: 2961
Date Joined: 14/11/10
I disagree with some of the
I disagree with some of the above.
I have a custom glass salmon Slayer and it punches lures 20-60g a mile.
When someone says you lose sensitivity that is taking things pretty seriously. If you can't feel a SW salmon hit a lure then you must be using wicket keeping gloves.
Also regarding casting 300-500 times, that would potentially mean landing 100-200 fish. No thanks.
If you don't live and breath Salmon fishing but want a good solid rod for throwing lures and also throwing lumo straws and blobs to Herring then the right glass rod is fine.
Mine was a 9/10 until I snapped the top two foot off in Bush tracks 2 weeks ago. Still devo!
Happy shopping
Alan James
Posts: 2234
Date Joined: 30/06/09
Snapped rod
That is the very reason why you should always transport your rods with the butt end facing forward. Observation would suggest that very few people do this. Similarly have the rods on the RHS of the vehicle rather than the left.
timboon
Posts: 2961
Date Joined: 14/11/10
And don't drive pissed on
And don't drive pissed on overgrown tracks in the dark